48 Hours - In Jason's Name
Episode Date: April 21, 2019An Irish businessman is killed by his American au-pair-turned-wife and her father. They claim self-defense. The dead man’s sister fights to clear his name. "48 Hours" correspondent Maureen ...Maher investigates.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In 2014, Laura Heavlin was in her home in Tennessee
when she received a call from California.
Her daughter, Erin Corwin, was missing.
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Jason, he was an amazing human being.
When he was young, he was fun,
vivacious, a little bit giddy.
So you're the big sister?
I'm the big sister, yeah, by about three and a half years.
That's just enough to be able to tell him what to do.
Absolutely, yeah.
Yeah, I don't think he always appreciated it.
Jason was a 31-year-old widower with two tiny children.
He decided that he needed support
and decided to engage the services of an au pair.
That was Molly Martins.
I always knew her as kind-hearted.
She loves other people more than she loves herself.
I would describe her, even growing up, as remarkably altruistic.
She was good with the kids.
Jason started to smile a bit more.
There was definitely something between them.
The two of them looked very happy.
Jason was always the romantic type.
He shouldn't have been alone for the rest of his life.
He proposed to her on Valentine's Day.
The wedding was beautiful.
She seemed happy.
I suppose a lot of things changed when they moved to America.
Jason started to talk about moving home.
He wasn't happy.
He said she was acting strange.
He would open up and say they were having difficulties
and then he would change the subject.
When they moved to the US, I definitely start to notice more verbal altercations and verbal
abuse. Jason was yelling at Molly.
Davidson County 911. My name is Tom Martins. My son-in-law got in a fight with my daughter.
I intervened and he's in bad shape. We need help. What do you mean he's in
bad shape? He's hurt. He's bleeding all over and I may have killed him. He's got a mile by the throat
like this. I was bringing help and he was going to need a chute. I said let her go. Let her go. I'm going to kill her. Let her go. I'm going to kill her.
He walks in that scene a nightmare.
Without Tom Martin's heroic efforts that night, Molly would be dead.
They claimed that it was self-defense.
So you're telling me you think that whole thing was staged?
Yes, 100%.
And the entire story that the two of them tell about Jason choking Molly,
in your mind, that is entirely a lie?
Yes.
The Martins didn't just murder Jason.
He was very controlled and abusive.
They tried to destroy his character.
Tell him that guy was crazy.
I would have done anything I needed to do
to get justice for Jason.
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I need someone.
All right, listen carefully.
I'll tell you how to do chest compressions.
I'll set a pace for you.
One, two, three, four.
The call came in the early morning hours of August 2nd, 2015.
I'm certified. I just can't think.
Okay, you have to stay calm.
Let your training take over.
We need to try to do this to help him, okay?
Okay.
All right.
Police arrived at this Winston-Salem, North Carolina home to find Jason Corbett beaten to death and his blood on his wife, Molly. They knew who did it, Molly and her father, Tom Martins.
The question was why. He's got Molly mom by the throat. Just hours later, Tom, a 30-year FBI
veteran, explains he'd been spending the night at his daughter's home. After being awakened by a
commotion upstairs, he says he grabbed a Little League baseball bat he brought as a gift for the kids and ran to her room.
He sees me coming and he goes around her throat like this.
And I said, let her go.
And he turned and went, yeah, let her go. I'm going to kill her.
Tom says his protective instincts as a father instantly kicked in.
Molly told investigators the same story.
She hit Jason with a paving stone that was sitting on her nightstand. You had a brick on your nightstand?
Yeah.
What was that for?
The kids and I were going to paint these bricks and flowers around the mailbox.
Oh, okay.
I get the map out.
I can't tell you how many houses are hidden. I can't tell you how many notes are hidden.
I can't tell you.
It's bad.
In Ireland, Jason's sister, Tracy Lynch,
still cannot comprehend that he died this way.
I just couldn't process that it was that he was my best friend. We were just two
of the closest people in the world to each other outside of my husband and
children. Tracy and Jason were part of a big Irish family in Limerick. She remembers her brother as a kind
and caring soul. We would just spend summers in Spanish Point in County Clare, hang out, fish,
just kind of normal traditional Irish upbringing really. We looked like each other, we were
different in so many ways. Jason was Wayne Corbett's twin. Would he have been the quiet one
or in the middle of it?
No, no, no, Jason wouldn't have been quiet.
You would hear him before you see him.
Jason married his first wife,
Mags Fitzpatrick, when he was 27.
They had two children, Jack and Sarah.
They were just so happy
and so excited with life and so enthusiastic about it as well.
And they had Sarah and, you know, I remember them saying that they had, that their family was complete.
They had their little prince and princess.
But in 2006, shortly after having their second child, Jason's storybook life came to an abrupt end
when Mags, a long-time asthmatic, suddenly had an attack.
Mags woke Jason to say that she was feeling wheezy, and he set her up.
She started to take her nebulizer, and she started to get progressively worse.
We found out later they called him in and told him that she had died in the ambulance on
the way to the hospital. And how old was he? He was 30. So 30 years old? Yeah. With a two-year-old
son? He had a 12-week-old daughter. With two very small children still at home, Jason Corbett had no choice but to pick up the pieces and move on after Mags died.
A year and a half later, 25-year-old Molly Martins answered an ad for an au pair.
She arrived in Limerick in March 2008. I met Molly the day she arrived in the airport in
Shannon. Jason's longtime friend, Lynn Shanahan.
And what was your impression of her when you met her?
My first thoughts and the first sentence to my own husband
were this is not what Jason needs right now.
Why?
The minute I saw her with the big bouncing curls,
she was in her 20s.
She had a big bright-coloured coat, fur collar, with the big bouncing curls. She was in her 20s.
She had a big bright-colored coat, fur collar,
cowboy boots, was dressed and makeup done like a pageant queen, as we would have said.
She just seemed not the nanny type.
But Molly's uncle, Mike Ernest, says she was great with kids.
She grew up babysitting, always loved children.
Molly Martins had grown up in Knoxville, Tennessee.
She dropped out of Clemson University and was looking to begin a new chapter in her life.
I think, you know, she maybe was looking for something different and that this might get her involved, too,
in something that I think she was passionate about, which is children.
In Limerick, Molly instantly connected with Jason's children,
three-year-old Jack and one-year-old Sarah.
He liked her. She seemed gentle with the kids.
We started to see, you know, a little glimpse of the old Jason coming back
that he was just, you know, not little glimpse of the old Jason coming back that he was just, you know,
not so sad all the time. That's when Jason and Molly's relationship changed from professional
to personal. We went on holiday together. The two of them looked very happy. The kids were happy.
And they were soon making long-term plans. It was here at Freddy's Bistro in Limerick on Valentine's Day 2010,
nearly two years after Molly Martins arrived to be an au pair,
that Jason asked her to be his wife.
Molly was over the moon and immediately began planning for a wedding back in the States.
They came and said that they got engaged
and we opened a bottle of champagne and toasted their future.
Was he happy?
He was happy, yeah, he was.
He was in love, he loved Molly.
But that happiness wouldn't last for long.
Davidson County 911, what is the address of your emergency?
wouldn't last for long.
Davidson County 911, what is the address of your emergency?
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I'm telling you, that guy was crazy.
So there's a history of domestic violence at the house?
Yes.
Tell them that I'm lying. Forever. two pounds at the house? Yes. Tom said, why not?
Forever.
Molly Corbett and Tom Martins continued to give Davidson County investigators
a blow-by-blow account
of what they say happened that night
in that bedroom.
By now, they've washed off Jason's blood.
Okay.
You know your husband didn't survive his injuries, right? By now, they've washed off Jason's blood.
Tom claims that when he arrived earlier that evening to visit Molly and the kids, Jason was drunk.
They all went to bed without incident.
But hours later, Jason's daughter, Sarah, woke up from a nightmare.
She felt like a ferret under her sheet,
more insects and spiders and lizards.
It was a cold that had spoken to me.
In the middle of her interview, Molly tells investigators she's in pain from the chokehold Jason had her in.
Investigators, she's in pain from the chokehold Jason had her in.
They photograph her, including a red mark on the center of her neck.
It's hard to see in this photo.
They also take pictures of Tom. But as Molly and Tom tell tales about Jason's abuse, Jason's family had a different story.
They say Molly was the one who caused problems in the relationship for years.
The person in Ireland was very different to the one that we met in Tennessee.
Jason's family supported the marriage.
But when they arrived in the States for the wedding,
they say they noticed Molly was behaving strangely.
She was just very controlling.
She was angry, I would say.
And for someone who was about to get married, she just wasn't herself.
She stayed in bed, curled up in a ball, didn't come out and socialise with anybody.
And that, she says, wasn't the worst of it.
What really set alarm bells ringing for me was when one of the bridesmaids told us before the wedding that Molly had told them that she had been friends with Mags,
Jack and Sarah's mother, before she died of cancer. Mags didn't die of cancer,
she died of an asthma attack. And of course, Molly never knew Mags. Jason's family
was beginning to wonder if he was making a mistake by marrying Molly. And I said,
you're the most unhappiest married man I've ever seen on his wedding day. Jason's best
friend and groomsman, Paul Dillon, thought he should walk away. And I asked him to just leave
her and just get on the plane and go home. And
he said he can't. He made the commitment. This man believes the Corbett's had a reason to be
concerned. My name is Keith McGinn and Molly Martins is my former fiance. Molly had been
engaged to another man who says they were still together when she left for Ireland to become Jason's au pair.
She had a lot of things going on. She had migraines. She had insomnia.
She basically, she spent a lot of time just soaking in the bathtub,
sometimes just crying on the bathroom floor.
Keith claims both he and Molly struggled with mental health issues
that he describes in a self-published book written before Jason died.
He gave us no records to back that up,
although Molly's medical records from years after her time with Keith
show that she was diagnosed with depression.
Her brother Connor is reluctant to talk about it.
Much has been said about Molly's mental health.
Are you comfortable addressing that?
I don't want to comment on that.
At the time of the wedding, according to Molly's family, all was well,
and she was happy to be walking down the aisle with Jason.
She looked very happy, and she looked like she was very happy to be getting married.
Jason was able to get a job transfer with the packaging company he'd worked for in Ireland.
He and Molly settled into the suburbs of Winston-Salem,
where Molly got a job as a part-time swim instructor,
but spent most of her time with Jack and Sarah.
I was concerned for Jason and his
children. He had moved lock, stock and barrel from Ireland, packed up his whole life, sold his house,
gave up his job and was on the cusp of a new life. Well, my impression was that things seemed to be
okay. I don't know if they seemed to be great. I did see occasions where there seemed like there were issues coming up.
After four years, Molly was closer to the children than ever
and considered them her own.
But her relationship with Jason was in trouble.
Jason started to talk about moving home.
He wasn't happy.
Did he say why he wasn't
happy? A lot of it was down to the relationship with Molly. She was acting strange. There was
things occurring that he wasn't comfortable with and he missed Ireland, wanted to move back,
but he knew and said that there would be huge difficulty in him coming back once Molly found
out. And the kids at this point, they call her mom.
Yes.
She is their mother.
Yes.
Molly had always wanted to officially become Jack and Sarah's mother,
but Jason would not allow it.
He didn't want to take the only mother they'd ever known away from them,
but he wouldn't allow her to adopt them?
Yes.
Why?
Because of what she had said about Mags and because of her erratic behavior. She waited
until just before the wedding and then all these stories came out. So when we spoke,
he said he just couldn't. How could he go ahead and allow Molly to adopt the children
when he had all these issues of trust?
allow Molly to adopt the children when he had all these issues of trust.
Now with Jason dead, police ask Molly about his family.
Jason's decision not to allow her to adopt Jack and Sarah hits hard. I was scared that I would take the kids.
Did you adopt the children?
No.
Then that's a real possibility.
The thought of losing the children is more than Molly can bear,
but investigators offer Molly a light at the end of a dark tunnel. This is going to be self-defense, okay? I don't think there's going to be any issue with that. Tracy says when she got the horrible news of Jason's death,
she knew it could not have been self-defense.
Jason was a gentle person.
As Molly and Tom claimed.
I kept ringing Molly.
She wouldn't return my calls.
Her parents completely stonewalled us.
I got 30 seconds on the phone with Jack to tell him that I loved him and I was coming over to be with him.
Tracy says she was desperate to get to Jason's children as soon as possible.
I was terrified.
What were you terrified about?
I was terrified she would kill them.
You thought that Molly might kill the children?
Absolutely.
Years before, Jason had named Tracy legal guardian if he were to die,
and Tracy knew Molly would not give up the kids without a fight. She immediately flew to North
Carolina and filed for custody. Sure enough, Molly filed a motion for custody as well. No one knew
what scenario was playing in Molly's head, what she thought she needed to do,
or was there a chance that they would be in danger if she knew they were taking them from her.
During the troubled marriage, Molly had asked an attorney what her rights to the children would be
in the event of a divorce. She also secretly recorded arguments with Jason.
Are you finished with your dinner, hon? I'm talking to you. Is this how you treat
somebody? You just ignore me? I said I'd like to have dinner with my son. I'm talking to you.
I shouldn't have to say it over and over. I shouldn't have to say it, Molly.
Can you guys get out the stuff for me?
See, you're talking to your son, but I'm talking about something else. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. use her name or show her face.
She says she's been threatened by Jason's supporters.
There were, you know, some signs that things weren't right.
Like what?
Controlling behavior, some of the bad language and calling her names.
And then it just progressively got worse.
Forced sex, stuff like that.
Molly never reported any abuse to police.
Molly has said that Jason was verbally abusive,
had started becoming physically abusive.
Do you think that any of that is possible?
I don't believe any of that is true.
Four days after Jason died, both of his children were interviewed by a social worker.
Tell me why you're here.
My dad died, and people are trying to, my aunt and uncle from my dad's side,
are trying to take me away, take me away from my mom.
Jack and Sarah are asked about the night their father died.
I don't know what my dad would have thought.
Tell me why that's not happening.
Because he just gets really, really angry.
He says, why'd you break me up?
Jack even explains the odd presence of the paving stone in the bedroom.
It was in my mom's room because it was raining earlier, and we were going to clean it.
We didn't want it getting at all wet.
When a social worker asks the kids about their parents' relationship,
both seem to support Molly's claims of abuse.
Do you know physically?
I've worked you twice.
What did you do?
Punching, hitting, pushing.
Has anyone told you what to say when other people talk to you?
I'm just going to say the truth now.
That's all she says.
But Tracy says that is not the truth.
You believe that Molly or someone in the Martins family coached the children?
I'm certain of it.
The children were removed from Molly's care and placed with Tracy,
who was staying at a hotel in North Carolina, as the custody battle waged on.
Tom and Molly were allowed a visit.
It would prove to be one of their last.
Sixteen days after Jason was beaten to death, Tracy prevails.
Jack and Sarah would be heading back to Ireland with her and away from Molly, the only mother these children have ever really known.
She was very, very devastated.
She could barely function.
I mean, she was absolutely distraught.
In the months following their return to Ireland, Tracy says that Molly repeatedly tried to contact Jack and Sarah,
posting numerous messages on social media, hoping that somebody here in Limerick would
pass them on to the children. Did you feel that Molly had any rights to them at all?
Did you feel that Molly had any rights to them at all?
No, Molly had murdered their father.
And that's what I firmly believed at that point.
Tracy had a new battle on her hands.
Justice for Jason.
After the autopsy, I recall the share saying that it was blunt force trauma. She was told that Jason suffered at least a dozen blows to the head.
I looked at my brother in the coffin and witnessed just the devastation that one human can inflict on another.
After those first interviews, Molly and Tom heard nothing more from authorities.
Despite Molly being told that the attack on Jason looked like self-defense,
I don't think there's a need to do that.
a murder investigation actually kicked into full gear.
And in January 2016, five months after Jason died,
father and daughter are shocked when they are charged with second-degree murder.
I mean, of course they're devastated.
Tom, the FBI veteran of 30 years, would now find out what it's like to sit at a criminal defense table.
They were both aware of the possibility that they might not walk out of that courtroom.
Correct.
We were under a lot of pressure as a family,
and, you know, we were concerned, were they going to be charged?
So it was a relief that the charges were brought.
Tracy felt sure from the beginning that Molly and Tom did not kill her brother Jason in self-defence.
In fact, she believes she knows the real motive.
There isn't a shadow of a doubt in my mind in self-defense. In fact, she believes she knows the real motive.
There isn't a shadow of a doubt in my mind that Jason was beaten to death
because he was going to leave with the kids.
Tracy says Jason's plans to move back to Ireland
with Jack and Sarah, but without Molly,
had finally come together.
She and Lynn believe Molly found out that night.
I think Jason became surplus to her requirements. She didn't need him anymore. She just wanted the children. After knowing her for
years, Lynn thinks Molly had been plotting to get the kids away from Jason for some time. She was
playing the long game that she was telling people
that he had been abusive. She had her recordings.
She would have a case to get the children from him.
While awaiting the trial, Tracy settled Jack and Sarah into their new home back in Ireland.
They had intensive therapy, she says, and adjusted well.
Is it true that your father was abusive or false?
False.
Nine months after returning to Limerick,
Jack recanted what he told social workers after his father was killed.
What did Molly say?
We were going into an interview.
She was saying a lot of story, making up stories about my dad saying that he was abusive.
And she started saying, if you don't lie, I'll never ever see you again.
Jack says he only has one motive for telling the truth now.
And I want to know what happened to my dad, and I want justice to be served.
Today, Jack is 14 years old and Sarah is 12. While we were in Ireland,
they did not want to be interviewed, but the family did allow us to take video of them.
Molly Corbett and Tom Martins went to trial together in July 2017.
Family and friends of both the Corbets and the Martens turned out in force.
What was it like to be so close,
sitting by and in the same room with Molly and Tom?
It was very, very difficult.
You're sitting there and looking at, you know,
two people that had
done something that was so malicious and insidious and ferocious. We thought we
had evidence stacked up behind us a mile high. Assistant District Attorney Alan
Martin was confident the state would prove that Molly and Tom murdered Jason
with malice. The viciousness and violence and excessiveness of the injuries that
Jason suffered was really the cornerstone of our case. Not only had the autopsy stated Jason
suffered at least a dozen blows to the head, the exact number could not be determined because he'd been struck repeatedly in the same spot. We looked at the damage to his scalp.
His scalp was literally ripped from his skull.
His skull was crushed.
For comparison, the jury was shown pictures of the defendants taken that same night.
They didn't have a scratch, an abrasion.
Molly had a delicate bracelet on her that night that she continued to wear throughout
the trial.
Martin says that makes Molly and Tom's claim of self-defense a tough sell.
You cannot be engaged in a Donnybrook like they described with a man who is bigger than you, stronger than you, taller than you, and not have a mark on you.
It's just not possible.
A blood spatter expert bolstered that argument.
You can tell by looking at the spatter on the wall that Jason's head was 12 to 18 inches off the floor
when some of the bludgers struck.
Martin says that meant Tom was standing over Jason,
still swinging after Jason could no longer have been a threat.
I've known Tom Martins for 50 years.
This is not someone who loses control.
This is not someone who is going to kill someone out of malice.
I absolutely do not believe there's any way Tom would hit him while he's down.
The defense pointed to photos that showed Molly did have that red mark on her neck.
And a nurse practitioner testified that at a checkup just two weeks before
he died, Jason said he'd been more stressed lately. He had complained of getting angry for
no apparent reason. One strand of long blonde hair was found in Jason's hand. It was likely Molly's,
but was never tested. And the autopsy indicated there were defensive wounds to Jason's left arm, but not to his right,
the one in which he supposedly held Molly.
He said he was going to kill Molly.
Still claiming he did what any father would do to protect his child,
the defense's star witness, Tom Martins, takes the stand.
No cameras were allowed, but there is audio.
I certainly felt he would kill me.
I felt both of our lives were in danger.
I did the best I could.
Molly did not testify,
and the defense was not allowed to offer evidence regarding Jason's alleged abuse.
I did not like some of Jason's behavior, particularly with regard to my daughter.
That does not mean that I demonized the man. Tom testifies he went only as far as he had to.
Once I got control of the bat, I hit him until I considered the threat to be over.
When I considered the threat to be over, I quit hitting him.
And I considered the threat to be over when he went down.
During closing arguments, Alan Martin used the bat and paving stone from the Corbett
bedroom to hit home his point at the prosecution table.
How much force does it take to split the flesh all the way to the skull?
You know what malice feels like
when it comes from the brick that Molly had?
It feels like I hate it,
and I want those kids.
That's what malice feels like.
After nine days of testimony, arguments,
and crime scene photos so graphic we can only show you isolated images,
the jury deliberated for just three hours.
If they're coming back this fast with two unanimous verdicts, that's a really good sign.
Molly and Tom were found guilty of second-degree murder.
It was just overwhelming belief, really.
They beat him horribly and viciously,
and no human being deserves to leave their marital bedroom
with their skull destroyed like what happened to Jason.
Had you been thinking that it was possible that a guilty verdict might come back?
I did not think it was possible that both of them would be convicted of second-degree murder.
Molly and Tom were immediately sentenced to 20 to 25 years in prison.
That's when Molly turned around in court
and said something to her mother.
I'm so sorry.
I should have just let him kill me.
But as it turns out,
this case may be far from over.
Mistakes were made at trial.
You saw tears. There were tears. I even had a few tears there while the verdicts were being ran through.
After the verdicts, as Tom Martins and Molly Corbett were led off to prison,
the jury foreman described his struggle.
It wasn't an easy decision. Somebody's life changes.
And then he blurted out something that could potentially put those freshly minted verdicts
in jeopardy.
We didn't discuss a verdict,
but in having private conversations, everybody...
We could read that everybody was going in the same direction.
Did the foreman just admit the jury discussed the case
prior to deliberations?
If so, that would be a direct violation of the judge's daily instructions to wait.
It's been pounced upon to say, aha, these people got together and started deliberating before they were supposed to.
Prosecutor Alan Martin disagrees.
they were supposed to. Prosecutor Alan Martin disagrees. What I hear is we're a group of people who were sitting together seeing all these events transpire in the courtroom together.
Without talking about it, we can read each other's body language while we're in the courtroom.
But within days, the defense filed a motion to have the verdict thrown out
based on jury misconduct.
The trial judge denied that motion.
But one year later, the defense went to the appellate court,
this time arguing there were numerous errors at trial.
There's part of me that maybe has some thankfulness that so many errors were made at trial
that leaves room for a proper appellate decision in favor of Tom and Molly.
For one thing, there were bloodstains on the hem of Tom's boxer shorts
that the state said indicated he'd been standing over Jason as he swung the bat.
Those stains were assumed to be Jason's blood, but they were never tested.
It's not practical, reasonable, or feasible to test every single blood spot in every location.
Then there's the matter of the statements from Jack and Sarah.
Tell me why you're here, my bad guys.
Molly's brother Connor is upset that the trial judge did not allow them in.
The kids' statements say that Jason was an abuser.
What did you mean?
Um, punching, hitting, pushing.
And those interviews were conducted in professional environments on multiple occasions where Molly was not present.
And to the allegation from the Jason side of the family that they were coached by Molly?
I mean, the interviews were conducted by professionals.
That's their job.
Like, why would the prosecution try so hard to prevent that from coming from trial?
It's only evidence for the jury.
Let them make that decision.
Jack's statement recanting what he'd said after he'd returned to Ireland
was also never heard by the jury.
Is it true that your father was abusive or false?
Um, false.
The Martins family has maintained all along it is that statement that was coached.
Um, she was saying a lot of story making of stories about my dad saying that he was abusive.
Do you think that the recanting should be allowed in too?
I don't think so under the conditions, but if they can't, then the jury can discern which is truthful.
Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, the Court of Appeals is now in session.
In January 2019, the State Appeals Court makes the rare move to allow oral arguments in Molly and Tom's case. Once
again, both families flock to the courthouse, with Tracy flying in from
Limerick. There is always another stepper. There is always something else to face.
Neither Tom nor Molly are present in the courtroom. How does she feel her chances
are with the appeal? I don't know. I think that she is
cautiously optimistic, but I think that there's still a lot of hopelessness, too.
It's hard to trust the system after what they've gone through. Each side has just a half hour to
make its most important points. The defense goes first. There are
a number of statements from the children including dad got mad for no reason. It
was error to exclude them. But the prosecution pushes back. The fact that
somebody makes a statement doesn't mean that it's trustworthy. The children
didn't want to go back to Ireland. They had friends, they had schools, they were
used to the USA, they rode horses, they lived in a nice house, they were comfortable.
The defense. All we're asking for is a fair trial. Makes an impassioned argument about jury
misconduct. In having private conversations, everybody, we could read that everybody was going in the same direction.
A juror is confessing on the courthouse steps,
not even an hour after the verdict that they engaged in private conversations.
Are you concerned about this appeal?
I'm not concerned about it. I think the case was really, really strong.
Mike says it is strength of a different kind that keeps Tom going.
Tom, I think, even as he sits in this atrocious miscarriage of justice,
knows that he saved his daughter's life.
And, you know, I think he can sleep at night
knowing that even if she is in
prison, she's not dead. Back in Ireland, Tracy waits for the appeals court's decision.
She's written a book about this case and Jason. I wrote the book to give him back his character,
the Martins, Molly Martins in particular, tried to destroy his character.
I smiled briefly to myself as I realized that Jason
eventually found himself back in the only place on Earth
he ever wanted to be, in the arms of his beloved Mags.
She finds comfort that her brother is buried in Limerick,
next to his first wife and the mother of his children.
Jack and Sarah picked out the picture to change
on the headstone from Mags to both of them.
I hope they're together somewhere.
The memories just float to the surface,
and, you know, they'll always be part of our lives.
A wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of Jason's children was settled by Tom Martins.
There was no admission of wrongdoing by Tom or Molly.
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